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Ireland’s PTSB may absorb initial ECB rate hikes – CEO

By:
Reuters
Updated: Jun 24, 2022, 12:21 UTC

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Ireland's Permanent TSB may choose to absorb the first two rounds of European Central Bank interest rate hikes and not increase its own mortgage pricing in order to win business in the mortgage market, its chief executive said on Friday.

The spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Ireland

DUBLIN (Reuters) -Ireland’s Permanent TSB may choose to absorb the first two rounds of European Central Bank interest rate hikes and not increase its own mortgage pricing in a bid to grow its market share, the bank’s chief executive said on Friday.

The ECB outlined plans this month to end quantitative easing on July 1 then raise rates by 25 basis points on July 21. It plans to hike again on Sept. 8 and go for a bigger move, unless the inflation outlook improves in the meantime.

“I think it’s fair to say that Irish banks given their liquid position and given where they are can withstand for a portion of time some of those interest rate increases,” Eamonn Crowley told reporters after the company’s AGM.

“You could imagine the first couple of moves being okay, it depends on the pace and the size and the scale … No decisions have been made, no strategies have been adopted but we want to maintain our competitive position, that’s the key message.”

Majority state-owned PTSB is the third largest mortgage lender in Ireland with a 17% share of the market at the end of March.

Crowley said the bank estimates it would make a 40 million euro gain from a 50 basis point rate hike as it would no longer be charged for holding excess cash and its stock of mortgages that track the ECB rate would automatically reprice.

He also said the bank’s pipeline of approved mortgage loans continues to increase and that he expects the Irish mortgage market to keep growing through the current cost of living crunch due to the demand for loans far outstripping housing supply.

PTSB shareholders on Friday approved the 7.5 billion euro deal to buy mortgage and business loan books, branches and the asset finance business of NatWest Group’s Irish unit, Ulster Bank.

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Toby Chopra and David Evans)

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